View Full Version : 3D printing
Brian d marge
9th January 2012, 20:53
http://www.kurzweilai.net/3d-systems-cubify-brings-3d-printing-to-home-consumer
Might be ok for small prototype work if Accuracy isnt critical
1200 us dollars
Hmmmmm might think about it ,,,,
Stephen
avgas
9th January 2012, 21:03
if you want to save US$100
http://store.makerbot.com/thing-o-matic-kit-mk7.html
Tigadee
10th January 2012, 10:08
Legacy Effects created the entire Iron Man 2 costume custom-fit for Robert Downey Jr using a 3D printer, printing out all the intricate pieces, strengthening and painting them, and assembling them into a durable costume that endured hours of action scenes and re-takes.
Pretty amazing...
Kendog
10th January 2012, 11:16
I have seen the medical profession are working with 3d printers.
From your own stem cells they can print organs e.g. a kidney (25 organs so far) that have a 0% chance of rejection, because it is your own organ.
They think in 5-10 years this will be the way transplants are done.
Tigadee
10th January 2012, 12:55
Could they print out a bigger p*nis for me please? :tugger:
Subike
10th January 2012, 13:01
some one needs to buy one of these and start printing out false teeth.
silly?
not when you consider the charges of orthodontist for a set of false teeth that are plastic anyway..
designer teeth, could be a winner for someone with the interest..
Brian d marge
10th January 2012, 13:06
I use it quite often , for anything I am making , its cheap and I try to use the get it right first time ( only cos i cant afford cock ups ! ...
ie , draw it , check it , think everything is ok , off to the machinist , he spends a day making it,,,,
get it back , Crap , Dead epileptic ...( doesnt fit )
waste of money
So I tend to use 3d printing to check my work and to tey things out , eg a new gear mech, will it shift , ?
This one may not be accurate enough , but it might be ok for smaller things ,for example a cylinder mold for a 100cc bucket racer ?
Stephen
Tazz
22nd April 2014, 14:32
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/m3d/the-micro-the-first-truly-consumer-3d-printer
bluninja
22nd April 2014, 15:07
Could they print out a bigger p*nis for me please? :tugger:
Maybe print you some smaller hands instead :rolleyes:
Grumph
22nd April 2014, 15:15
Having been in a hospital ward lately where most were wearing colostomy bags - not me, thank christ - I had the idea of rapid prototyping a QD plumbing fitting in the owner's own protein. Graft that on at the colostomy tube outlet, no rejection probs and hey presto, quick change bags....No leakage or tape required.
Hope to hell someone's done it by the time I need one......
R650R
22nd April 2014, 21:51
I'd love to have one, the potential is huge.
At WOF time you could print off some brake pads that will pass at a glance, add a layer of tread to tyres.
A susbstitute A arm for the suspension or CV joints.
Be one careful slow drive to the testing station though....
These things will be cool when they are properly affordable with open sourcing of technology allowing all the great minds without money to take our species up a notch with new inventions.
unstuck
23rd April 2014, 08:16
Could they print out a bigger p*nis for me please? :tugger:
Someone is already using them to make huge cocks. I always knew he was plastic.
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-71lFvcCYTKc/UHa-R5aN7CI/AAAAAAAACTs/Q6rKa0XfS-A/s1600/John_Key_GCSB_Shirt.jpg:devil2:
SMOKEU
23rd April 2014, 09:29
Make some epic guns.
oldrider
23rd April 2014, 10:54
I have seen the medical profession are working with 3d printers.
From your own stem cells they can print organs e.g. a kidney (25 organs so far) that have a 0% chance of rejection, because it is your own organ.
They think in 5-10 years this will be the way transplants are done.
Do it yourself testicles :eek: .... if the lesbos get hold of this us men could become redundant overnight! ... Men, that is not a good look! :no:
Swoop
23rd April 2014, 11:06
I'd love to have one, the potential is huge.
At WOF time you could print off some brake pads that will pass at a glance, add a layer of tread to tyres.
A susbstitute A arm for the suspension or CV joints.
Be one careful slow drive to the testing station though....
I wonder how many number plates have been printed...:blip:
Ocean1
23rd April 2014, 18:46
Having been in a hospital ward lately where most were wearing colostomy bags - not me, thank christ - I had the idea of rapid prototyping a QD plumbing fitting in the owner's own protein. Graft that on at the colostomy tube outlet, no rejection probs and hey presto, quick change bags....No leakage or tape required.
Hope to hell someone's done it by the time I need one......
I saw a report a couple of years ago about the use of 3D printers to make protein stents. I've since heard they're printing tailored "cell soup" scaffolds to grow arteries in situ.
Late last year someone printed a functional, (but non-viable) heart.
There's also a rapidly evolving set of Ti-printing surgical implant technologies.
Hang in there dude, you may not actually get to live forever but you'll likely have a few more years in you yet.
Madness
23rd April 2014, 21:15
I was blown away a few weeks ago when in the Whangarei Warehouse Stationery store to see they stock a 3D printer. Not cheap but probably relative to the cost of a VHS recorder in the early 80's.
www.warehousestationery.co.nz/is-bin/INTERSHOP.enfinity/WFS/WSL-B2C-Site/en_NZ/-/NZD/ViewOfferDetail-Product?ProductRef=215398@WSL-B2C
rustic101
23rd April 2014, 22:06
Watched one in action and looked impressive for a cheap item.
http://www.noelleeming.co.nz/shop/computers/printers/3d-printers/makerbot-replicator-2x-replicator-2x-3d-printer/prod127994.html
Grumph
24th April 2014, 20:59
I saw a report a couple of years ago about the use of 3D printers to make protein stents. I've since heard they're printing tailored "cell soup" scaffolds to grow arteries in situ.
Late last year someone printed a functional, (but non-viable) heart.
There's also a rapidly evolving set of Ti-printing surgical implant technologies.
Hang in there dude, you may not actually get to live forever but you'll likely have a few more years in you yet.
Well I certainly fucking hope so...I've got a couple of customers with wish lists as long as my arm and i'm now warning them they may be disappointed....
I've already got enough stents - and stents inside stents - to make a pretty decent oil line....
BTW, when they pump them up,you hear the units called out - 8, 10, 12, OK. So I asked, what are the units ? Bloody ATMOSPHERES...
12 atmosphere pressure of saline solution inside your heart....shut me up immediately and brought me out in a sweat.
Ocean1
24th April 2014, 21:22
BTW, when they pump them up,you hear the units called out - 8, 10, 12, OK. So I asked, what are the units ? Bloody ATMOSPHERES...
12 atmosphere pressure of saline solution inside your heart....shut me up immediately and brought me out in a sweat.
:laugh: Not bad for a lump of meat eh?
R650R
25th April 2014, 12:27
I'm struggling to grasp the full potential of the idea but certainly in modelling, particularly architectural, it would bring in a whole new level of realism.
Actually know a guy who makes the real architectural models as profession. Some of his colleagues have switched to 3D print but they lack a realism with same material used throughout and he sometimes gets called in to paint them and add details.
They are cool in conjunction with 3D scanner. Jay Lenos garage had an episode where he scanned an old classic car part, printed it then gave to engineer to make copy out of metal.
No longer will there be a racket in OEM parts on cars and bikes once stronger materials are available, years away yet I reckon.
Grumph
25th April 2014, 13:23
:laugh: Not bad for a lump of meat eh?
i just said quietly "hope you don't get your balloons from hong Kong..." Much laughter in theater.
Tazz
25th April 2014, 13:33
Actually know a guy who makes the real architectural models as profession. Some of his colleagues have switched to 3D print but they lack a realism with same material used throughout and he sometimes gets called in to paint them and add details.
They are cool in conjunction with 3D scanner. Jay Lenos garage had an episode where he scanned an old classic car part, printed it then gave to engineer to make copy out of metal.
No longer will there be a racket in OEM parts on cars and bikes once stronger materials are available, years away yet I reckon.
I'm yet to read up closely on it but they have done this sort of thing on the likes of aircraft carriers for years. Damn military and their cool toys.
nosebleed
25th April 2014, 22:23
Actually know a guy who makes the real architectural models as profession. Some of his colleagues have switched to 3D print but they lack a realism with same material used throughout and he sometimes gets called in to paint them and add details.
They are cool in conjunction with 3D scanner. Jay Lenos garage had an episode where he scanned an old classic car part, printed it then gave to engineer to make copy out of metal.
No longer will there be a racket in OEM parts on cars and bikes once stronger materials are available, years away yet I reckon.
Its a bit closer than you may think, especially with titanium…
http://youtu.be/Dw6cs7opvzA
husaberg
26th April 2014, 19:51
http://www.grassrootsengineering.com/blog/my-3d-printer-cad-drawings-and-bill-of-materials/
http://www.grassrootsengineering.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/greng_2001m.jpg
mashman
2nd May 2014, 11:19
Food for thought (http://www.engadget.com/2014/03/27/foodini/)
Ocean1
2nd May 2014, 19:15
Food for thought (http://www.engadget.com/2014/03/27/foodini/)
That's fucking brilliant!
Bung the makings in the hopper, press "Beef Wellington" and Bob's yer auntie!
mashman
2nd May 2014, 20:20
That's fucking brilliant!
Bung the makings in the hopper, press "Beef Wellington" and Bob's yer auntie!
Shame they can't microwave it too (I know blasphemy) so that it's cooked when it comes out.
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